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USDA-NASS
Oklahoma Field Office
PO Box 528804
Oklahoma City, OK 73152-8804
OFFICIAL BUSINESS
ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED
Panhandle District
1959 Wichita
1976 Scout/Scout 66
2000 Jagger
2012 Endurance
North Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster
West Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster
Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster
East Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Sturdy
2000 Jagger
2012 Endurance1
South Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Custer
2012 Endurance
Southwest District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster Southeast District
1959 Triumph
1976 Sturdy
2000 Unknown2
2012 Endurance1
Northeast District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Endurance1
1 Beginning in 2008, the Northeast, East Central and Southeast Districts were combined as "Other Districts."
2 No major variety was listed as the top variety in this district.
Top Wheat Variety: by District, Oklahoma, Selected Years
U S D A - N A S S
OKLAHOMA FIELD OFFICE
Wilbert Hundl, Jr., Director
405-522-6190
n a s s - o k @ n a s s . u s d a . g o v
T he Wheat Variety Survey is conducted by phone in conjunction with the annual
County Agricultural Production Survey and the December Quarterly Agricultural Survey.
Producer responses will greatly improve these data products!
1986-1990
Chisholm did not appear on the
report until 1984 but by 1986 it
was planted on 23 percent of the
wheat acres and remained in the
top spot in the 1990 survey with
30.8%. Its acreage faded quickly
but has been reported every year
since, with 0.3% of the 2012
wheat acres.
1994
Karl’s popularity grew quickly
between 1990 and 1994 when it
had 41.2% of the acreage. By
1996 its share had been cut by
more than half, and included
acreage seeded to Karl 92. Karl
92 continues to be planted in very
small acreages up to the present.
1996
No one variety remained on top for
long during the 90s and Pioneer
2163 became the top variety in
1996 with 21.6% of the acres. It
was planted on significant acre-ages
until 2005, with very small
acreages reported as recently as
2010.
1998-2009
First appearing on the 1996 report,
Jagger became the top variety in
1998 and remained so for 12
1919-1934
Turkey was the leading wheat
variety in Oklahoma until after
1934, and continued to show up
on the Wheat Variety Report as
late as 1964. It has the highest
percentage for any one variety
during the period with 68.6% of
the seeded acres in 1919.
1939
Blackhull was reported with
significant acreage throughout the
1920s, 30s and 40s. With 36.6%
of the acreage, it was the number
one variety in 1939, and was
reported until 1959.
1944
The Tenmarq variety was the
most commonly planted variety on
the 1944 survey. Planted on
significant acreages for at least a
20 year span starting in the late
1930s, it last appeared on the
1964 report.
1949-1976
The Triumph Group of varieties
has the longest streak of any
variety in the 92 year period
included in this report. Triumph
was reported as early as 1944,
and was the top variety in 1949. In
the 1960s the Triumph Group
included Triumph, Improved
Triumph, Super Triumph and
Triumph 64. These varieties
continued to hold the highest
percentage of seeded acres until
1976, although from 1974-1976
Scout and Scout 66 had a larger
share than any one Triumph
variety. Triumph 64, which was
first listed on the 1964 report, is
still being reported, though it has
been planted on less than 0.2% of
the acreage since 2010.
1979-1984
TAM W-101 first appeared on the
Wheat Variety Report in 1973 and
had acreage reported every year
until 2007. During 1979 and 1984
it occupied more than 30 percent
of the acreage as the top variety.
Numerous other TAM varieties
have appeared on Oklahoma’s
report every year since then, and
currently make up just under four
percent of the state’s acreage, and
about a quarter of the wheat in the
Panhandle district.
HISTORIC WHEAT
VARIETIES
September 2012
straight years. Jagger obtained the
highest percentage planted to one
variety since Triumph or Turkey
with 46.1% of the wheat acres in
2003. More than a quarter of the
acreage was planted to Jagger for
11 years. Though it is no longer
the top wheat variety for the state,
it was planted on 16.6% of acres
in the Southwest District for 2012.
2010-2011
Endurance ousted Jagger as the
number one wheat variety in 2010,
after increasing the planted
acreage every year since it first
appeared on our report in 2006.
2012
The percentage of Duster seeded
in Oklahoma more than doubled
each year from 2007 to 2011. At
22.2% of planted acres, Duster
covered more ground than
Endurance did at its peak. These
two OSU bred varieties together
made up 38.7% of acres in 2012.
O k l a h o m a ’ s T o p W h e a t V a r i e t i e s
1 9 1 9 t o 2 0 1 2
U S D A - N A S S
O K L A H O M A
F I E L D O F F I C E

USDA-NASS
Oklahoma Field Office
PO Box 528804
Oklahoma City, OK 73152-8804
OFFICIAL BUSINESS
ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED
Panhandle District
1959 Wichita
1976 Scout/Scout 66
2000 Jagger
2012 Endurance
North Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster
West Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster
Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster
East Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Sturdy
2000 Jagger
2012 Endurance1
South Central District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Custer
2012 Endurance
Southwest District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Duster Southeast District
1959 Triumph
1976 Sturdy
2000 Unknown2
2012 Endurance1
Northeast District
1959 Triumph
1976 Triumph
2000 Jagger
2012 Endurance1
1 Beginning in 2008, the Northeast, East Central and Southeast Districts were combined as "Other Districts."
2 No major variety was listed as the top variety in this district.
Top Wheat Variety: by District, Oklahoma, Selected Years
U S D A - N A S S
OKLAHOMA FIELD OFFICE
Wilbert Hundl, Jr., Director
405-522-6190
n a s s - o k @ n a s s . u s d a . g o v
T he Wheat Variety Survey is conducted by phone in conjunction with the annual
County Agricultural Production Survey and the December Quarterly Agricultural Survey.
Producer responses will greatly improve these data products!
1986-1990
Chisholm did not appear on the
report until 1984 but by 1986 it
was planted on 23 percent of the
wheat acres and remained in the
top spot in the 1990 survey with
30.8%. Its acreage faded quickly
but has been reported every year
since, with 0.3% of the 2012
wheat acres.
1994
Karl’s popularity grew quickly
between 1990 and 1994 when it
had 41.2% of the acreage. By
1996 its share had been cut by
more than half, and included
acreage seeded to Karl 92. Karl
92 continues to be planted in very
small acreages up to the present.
1996
No one variety remained on top for
long during the 90s and Pioneer
2163 became the top variety in
1996 with 21.6% of the acres. It
was planted on significant acre-ages
until 2005, with very small
acreages reported as recently as
2010.
1998-2009
First appearing on the 1996 report,
Jagger became the top variety in
1998 and remained so for 12
1919-1934
Turkey was the leading wheat
variety in Oklahoma until after
1934, and continued to show up
on the Wheat Variety Report as
late as 1964. It has the highest
percentage for any one variety
during the period with 68.6% of
the seeded acres in 1919.
1939
Blackhull was reported with
significant acreage throughout the
1920s, 30s and 40s. With 36.6%
of the acreage, it was the number
one variety in 1939, and was
reported until 1959.
1944
The Tenmarq variety was the
most commonly planted variety on
the 1944 survey. Planted on
significant acreages for at least a
20 year span starting in the late
1930s, it last appeared on the
1964 report.
1949-1976
The Triumph Group of varieties
has the longest streak of any
variety in the 92 year period
included in this report. Triumph
was reported as early as 1944,
and was the top variety in 1949. In
the 1960s the Triumph Group
included Triumph, Improved
Triumph, Super Triumph and
Triumph 64. These varieties
continued to hold the highest
percentage of seeded acres until
1976, although from 1974-1976
Scout and Scout 66 had a larger
share than any one Triumph
variety. Triumph 64, which was
first listed on the 1964 report, is
still being reported, though it has
been planted on less than 0.2% of
the acreage since 2010.
1979-1984
TAM W-101 first appeared on the
Wheat Variety Report in 1973 and
had acreage reported every year
until 2007. During 1979 and 1984
it occupied more than 30 percent
of the acreage as the top variety.
Numerous other TAM varieties
have appeared on Oklahoma’s
report every year since then, and
currently make up just under four
percent of the state’s acreage, and
about a quarter of the wheat in the
Panhandle district.
HISTORIC WHEAT
VARIETIES
September 2012
straight years. Jagger obtained the
highest percentage planted to one
variety since Triumph or Turkey
with 46.1% of the wheat acres in
2003. More than a quarter of the
acreage was planted to Jagger for
11 years. Though it is no longer
the top wheat variety for the state,
it was planted on 16.6% of acres
in the Southwest District for 2012.
2010-2011
Endurance ousted Jagger as the
number one wheat variety in 2010,
after increasing the planted
acreage every year since it first
appeared on our report in 2006.
2012
The percentage of Duster seeded
in Oklahoma more than doubled
each year from 2007 to 2011. At
22.2% of planted acres, Duster
covered more ground than
Endurance did at its peak. These
two OSU bred varieties together
made up 38.7% of acres in 2012.
O k l a h o m a ’ s T o p W h e a t V a r i e t i e s
1 9 1 9 t o 2 0 1 2
U S D A - N A S S
O K L A H O M A
F I E L D O F F I C E